counter free hit unique web Britain’s most iconic car brand axes 5% of workforce after plunging into £1.16bn debt – sparking fears over its future – open Dazem

Britain’s most iconic car brand axes 5% of workforce after plunging into £1.16bn debt – sparking fears over its future


ASTON Martin has cut 170 jobs after losses widened by a fifth last year and it sold fewer cars than in 2023.

The luxury car manufacturer said it is planning to axe 5 per cent of its workforce as part of a cost-cutting plan as it seeks to return to profit amid a slew of new product launches.

Worker installing a tire on an Aston Martin DB11 on an assembly line.
Getty

Aston Martin is planning to axe 5 per cent of its workforce[/caption]

Illustration of Aston Martin's first electric SUV.
The brand also said it will delay the rollout of its first fully electric vehicle

The British manufacturing giant – famous for making fictional spy James Bond’s cars – is understood to be making most of the cuts in the UK.

All of the company’s departments will be hit including manufacturing, office jobs and management.

Aston Martin has its headquarters in Gaydon, Warwickshire, and another factory in St Athan, South Wales.

It said on Wednesday that the aim is to make sure the company is “appropriately resourced for its future plans” calling the cuts a “difficult but necessary action”.

The company is targeting yearly savings of £25million and expects to hit about half of that total this year.

Meanwhile Aston Martin also said it will delay the rollout of its first fully electric vehicle until near the end of the decade.

It was originally set to be launched in 2026 and the delay is part of what the company is calling a “phased approach” to electrification.

Since it was bought by Canadian billionaire Lawrence Stroll in 2020, Aston Martin has pushed on with a swathe of new model launches in a bid to turn its ailing fortunes around.

It recently appointed Adrian Hallmark as its new chief executive with him taking on the role in September amid a ramping up of sales of its new Vantage and DBX707 models, which it said helped boost production volumes.

The company also launched its flagship Vanquish model in September.


Aston Martin said the launches helped boost sales later in the year as it started delivering more of the new models to customers.

Wholesale volumes picked up 10 per cent year on year in the second half compared with 2023.

But the company’s wholesale volumes for the whole year were still down 9 per cent at 6,030 cars pushing its pre-tax losses to gape by a further 21 per cent to £289million.

It also saw its debt pile balloon by 43 per cent to £1.16billion during the year while shares were down about 33 per cent over the last year.

Aston Martin had warned in September that supply chain issues would hit annual production by about 1,000 cars.

It has also been battling weak trading in China amid a downturn in demand across the country.

Mr Hallmark said it has been “a period of intense product launches, coupled with industry-wide and company challenges”.

He said he wants Aston Martin to “transition from a high-potential business to a high-performing one, better equipped to navigate future opportunities and uncertainties”.

Silver Aston Martin Vanquish on an assembly line.
Alamy

An assembled Aston Martin Vanquish is raised up to have checks taken underneath the car[/caption]

Lawrence Stroll, owner of the Aston Martin Aramco Cognizant Formula One team.
Alamy

Lawrence Stroll, executive chairman of Aston Martin[/caption]

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